defy, / Long be it ere thou grow old, / Aching, shaking, crazy cold; / But still
continue as thou art, / Ancient person of my heart.’ The style of his wit, both
Metaphysical and Augustan, was admired by Marvell and Dryden. He turned to God
on his deathbed.
John Bunyan
Another kind of conversion was that ofJohn Bunyan (1628–1688). A tinker’s son
and a soldier in the Parliamentary Army, his Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners
(1666) recounts the effect of reading Luther, and the stages of Protestant spiritual
autobiography: conviction of sin, realization of the redemption, spiritual rebirth,
calling. He became an unlicensed Baptist preacher, was imprisoned in 1660, and
continued to preach and write in Bedford Jail; in prison again, he wrote The Pilgrim’s
Progress (1678, 1679),The Life and Death of Mr Badman and The Holy War.Pilgrim’s
Progress has been a most successful religious allegory, for reasons which are easily
seen.
As I walked through the wilderness of this world, I lighted on a certain place where was
a Den, and I laid me down in that place to sleep; and, as I slept, I dreamed a dream. I
dreamed, and behold I saw a man clothed with rags, standing in a certain place, with his
face from his own house, a book in his hand, and a great burden upon his back. I looked
and saw him open the book and read therein; and as he read, he wept, and trembled;
and not being able longer to contain, brake out with a lamentable cry, saying, ‘What shall
I do?’In this plight, therefore, he went home and refrained himself as long as he could,
that his wife and children should not perceive his distress; but he could not be silent
long, because that his trouble increased.
[This man is called ‘Christian’. Christian tells his wife and children that all in their
city will be burned by fire from heaven; they think he is mad.] Now I saw, upon a time,
when he was walking in the fields, that he was (as he was wont) reading in this book,
and greatly distressed in his mind; and as he read, he burst out, as he had done before,
crying, ‘What shall I do to be saved?’
[A man named Evangelist gave him a parchment] ... and there was written within,
‘Fly from the wrath to come.’ The man therefore read it, and looking upon Evangelist
very carefully [sorrowfully], said, Whither must I fly? Then said Evangelist, pointing with
his finger over a very wide field, Do you see yonder wicket-gate? The man said, No. Then
said the other, Do you see yonder shining light? He said, I think I do. Then said
Evangelist, Keep that light in your eye, and go up directly thereto; so shalt thou see the
gate; at which when thou knockest it shall be told thee what thou shalt do.
So I saw in my dream that the man began to run. Now, he had not run far from his
own door, but his wife and children perceiving it, began to cry after him to return; but
the man put his fingers in his ears, and ran on, crying, Life! life! eternal life! So he looked
not behind him,but fled towards the middle of the plain.
On his way from the City of Destruction to the Celestial City, Christian goes
through the Slough of Despond and Vanity Fair, and meets Mr Worldly Wiseman;
the piercing simplicity of the narrative brought it home to many for as long as
England was a strongly Protestant country. When in 1847 the worldly-wise
Thackeray chose for his novel the title Vanity Fair, he sharpened its moral perspec-
tive.
Bunyan challenges the idea that literary judgement is unaffected by belief. He
made his English plain and pure so that it might save souls. Readers who do not look
to be saved in Christian’s way, or who cannot put biblical revelation so far above
166 5 · STUART LITERATURE: TO 1700